Everyone wants to know how Sherie is doing. Please don’t be alarmed if you’ve e-mailed her and received no response. She’s alive and has a sense of humor to prove it. Her health, however, is not in mint condition. She’s fighting very hard, refusing to “throw in the towel” as she says. Right now, though, the cancer is not relenting. Over the past six months, Sherie has been enduring the devastating repercussions of her disease. The past two years have included several different kinds of chemotherapy treatments. None of which have put the disease into remission.
She currently underwent a procedure that may or may not show results. She also just began a new kind of therapy with the pill Tomoxophen. More than anything, we hope that the Tomoxophen will assist in shrinking the tumors which are posing a great deal of pain. In the meantime, Sherie is left with no choice but to take pain meds. So, while her pain is somewhat suppressed, so is her appetite. She is eating. But very little. Please continue to send her your love. Sending it to her through snail-mail is better than e-mail for right now. Using the computer is a bit frustrating to her. Also, if you’d like to stop by and visit, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays after 11:00am are preferable for the family. Please call Bruce at 503-781-0989 to arrange a visit. Sherie and the family send their love to all who have been with them over the past five years giving their undying support and care. Stay tuned to hear the latest from SHOC.
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Sherie was diagnosed with stage three ovarian cancer in the fall of 2004. She underwent a full hysterectomy and immediately began chemotherapy. Like most other newly diagnosed ovarian cancer patients, she was treated with Taxol through a port surgically placed in her upper right chest. She lost her hair, eyebrows and eyelashes. Over a year out from her hysterectomy, her lower abdomen continued to go through alternating states of numbness and pain. She experienced full-fledged neuropathy throughout the duration of her chemo treatment.
A cancer patient: yes. But, Sherie was also in her 27th year as a 6th grade school teacher at Kraxberger Middle School in Gladstone, Oregon. She was able to take four months off work (she returned to her classroom in the spring; just in time for Outdoor School). During this time, she researched information about her disease, assessed her life, and realized she could not sit quiet and let this illness have its way with her. In other words, she had cancer, cancer did not have her. As winter set in, Sherie realized how important hair really was. Not having it posed more problems than mere aesthetics. She was cold. Rather than just sporting any old head garment, she and long time friend Cathy Ekerson decided to craft symbolic fleece hats. Because Sherie knew she was not the only one experiencing this condition, she figured other women might be interested in wearing a hat that represented their own personal fight against cancer. The hats were somewhat of a hit. They quickly established a small product line called Hats of Empowerment under the company name Hilek Designs. Once orders and money began coming in, Sherie and Cathy wanted it to go toward funding research and awareness for the disease. They came across the gynecologic cancer laboratory at the Knight Cancer Institute at Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU). At the time, there were no organizations partnered with the lab to deliver continual funding. In their growingly frequent visits with one another, the two ladies wildly brainstormed all the different ways they could raise money for this lab. Then came the bright idea: a foundation. The Sherie Hildreth Ovarian Cancer Foundation was established. Today, the foundation is often referred to as the SHOC Foundation or simply SHOC. The first foundation event to take place was a run/walk in the summer of 2005. It was called The Mrs. Hildreth Empowerment Walk & Run. From there, the ball was in motion. The following four years have brought numerous fundraisers including auctions, dinners, luncheons, wine tastings, bingo, fishing derbies, and the annual run/walk all in the name of funding research to find a cure. To date, SHOC has donated $223,000 to the Knight Cancer Institute's gynecologic cancer lab headed by the devoted Dr. Tanya Pejovic. That's a big contribution for such a little organization. The foundation has come a long way over the course of five years. It's continuously growing, taking shape and moving forward. |
About UsThe Sherie Hildreth Ovarian Cancer (SHOC) Foundation is a 100% volunteer operated 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Since its founding in 2005 by Sherie Hildreth, the SHOC Foundation has donated $650,000 to support Ovarian and Gynecologic Cancer research at the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) Knight Cancer Institutie located in SW Portland. OHSU is the only facility of its kind in the state of Oregon. Archives
March 2010
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